"lui" means "him" in Italian.
"Lui fait quelque chose" means "he/she does something to him/her" in French.
Andare want "to be" = essere Io sono andato tu sei andato lui è andato and so on....
No, "minigooch" does not mean anything in Italian. It is not an Italian word or term.
No, "Cicci" does not mean "Frank" in Italian. "Frank" in Italian is "Francesco" or "Franco."
No. Zia is the correct/formal way of saying aunt in Italian.
Ha, Lui ha.
Lui è. es. He is Francesco -> Lui è Francesco
Lui manga
lui morde /or/ morde
Lui è ignorante
Yes. The personal pronoun 'lui' may mean 'he, him' in its role for emphasis in a sentence. It also may mean 'to him, to her, to it' in its role as the indirect object of the verb of the sentence.
A lui gli piaceva Roma? is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Did he love Rome?"Specifically, the preposition a is "to". The personal pronouns lui and gli mean "him". The verb piaceva means "(it) was pleasing to". The feminine noun Roma translates as "Rome".The pronunciation will be "ah lwee lyee pyah-TCHEH-vah ROH-mah" in Italian.
Lui farebbe meglio che me.
fiez-vous Ã? lui (not "en lui") means : trust him.
lazy = lui 'being lazy' = 'lui zijn'
Lui è così bello.
La barca di lui is an Italian equivalent of 'his boat'. The feminine definite article 'la' means 'the'. The feminine noun 'barca' means 'boat'. The preposition 'di' means 'of'. The personal pronoun 'lui' means 'he, him'.